King Push – Darkest Before Dawn: The Prelude

Album

King Push – Darkest Before Dawn: The Prelude

“They ask why I’m still talking dope/Why not?,” Pusha T raps on “MFTR.” Nearly 20 years after Clipse, Pusha T’s still rhyming about his cane-slanging days in Virginia, and calling himself the “last cocaine superhero” on “Keep Dealing.” Multiple producers worked on Darkest Before Dawn, but Boi-1da’s beat on “MFTR” sounds markedly different from Puff Daddy’s beat for “Crutches, Crosses, Caskets,” resulting in an inconsistent flow. Timbaland’s work comes off best, especially on “Untouchable.” And Pusha T delivers some standout lines on “Sunshine” as he talks about inequality in urban cities. “We all see it, but cell phones ain’t enough proof,” he raps. “So we all lose.”

Über dieses Album

“They ask why I’m still talking dope/Why not?,” Pusha T raps on “MFTR.” Nearly 20 years after Clipse, Pusha T’s still rhyming about his cane-slanging days in Virginia, and calling himself the “last cocaine superhero” on “Keep Dealing.” Multiple producers worked on Darkest Before Dawn, but Boi-1da’s beat on “MFTR” sounds markedly different from Puff Daddy’s beat for “Crutches, Crosses, Caskets,” resulting in an inconsistent flow. Timbaland’s work comes off best, especially on “Untouchable.” And Pusha T delivers some standout lines on “Sunshine” as he talks about inequality in urban cities. “We all see it, but cell phones ain’t enough proof,” he raps. “So we all lose.”

Über dieses Album

“They ask why I’m still talking dope/Why not?,” Pusha T raps on “MFTR.” Nearly 20 years after Clipse, Pusha T’s still rhyming about his cane-slanging days in Virginia, and calling himself the “last cocaine superhero” on “Keep Dealing.” Multiple producers worked on Darkest Before Dawn, but Boi-1da’s beat on “MFTR” sounds markedly different from Puff Daddy’s beat for “Crutches, Crosses, Caskets,” resulting in an inconsistent flow. Timbaland’s work comes off best, especially on “Untouchable.” And Pusha T delivers some standout lines on “Sunshine” as he talks about inequality in urban cities. “We all see it, but cell phones ain’t enough proof,” he raps. “So we all lose.”